Prison, a place that no one can call home, a place where all that was familiar
no longer exists, a place where a friendly face is nowhere to be seen, a place
that is full of hostility. That which becomes ‘home’ is nothing more than a
concrete space, a hole in which one is expected to live. Those with whom
the prisoners come into contact are hostile, unkind and unfair. Thus, as a
means by which to retain sanity and show the world what happens on the
‘inside’, prisoners begin to write – they begin to write in hostile spaces.
This study will argue that the body of writings that constitute ‘South
African prison literature’ is both substantial and under-researched. For both
of these reasons it warrants closer examination. Another argument that this
thesis will advance is that specific authors have made major contributions to
this collection of works, with Herman Charles Bosman being the foremost
of these. Bosman not only pioneered the prison novel in South Africa, but
also set the mould within which most of the other prison-authors have
patterned their works.
Herman Charles Bosman is often referred to as the ‘father’ of South
African prison literature. Such a statement of course presupposes that there
is a discernible body of writing that can be called ‘prison literature’. This
study will attempt to show that within the larger corpus of South African
literature there is indeed a body of writing that can usefully be categorized
under the broad rubric ‘prison literature’.
Undertaking such a categorization, however, requires generating certain
criteria, and then applying these criteria to determine whether specific
works adhere to them. For the purposes of this study, the most important
criterion is that, for a work to be considered as belonging to the corpus of
South African prison literature, it must be about the writer’s personal
experience of prison. In other words, fictional (imaginative) narratives
about prison life will fall beyond the purview of this study. While it must be
conceded that this criterion is not unarguable and self-evident, as the study
proceeds it will, I believe, be seen that there is good sense in excluding
purely fictional works. (Chapter Three advances the argument for this
criterion in more detail.)
Other variables have been accommodated – for example, from which
prison the prisoner is writing, whether the prisoner writes about his or her
experience during or after imprisonment, the nature of the crime committed
and when the imprisonment took place. In addition, there is no rigidity
about the number of criteria a particular work must fulfil in order to be
included in this study (Chapter Three also discusses these criteria at length).
One of the questions this thesis will attempt to answer is why prisoners
write in the first place. Society’s stereotypical view of a criminal – someone
lacking in morals and education – is no doubt dominant, and the notion of a
‘criminal’ adding value to the study of literature is not often conceptualized
by many. Writing becomes a powerful tool for the authors examined here,
often for different reasons and purposes, but a tool nonetheless. Paul Gready
says that,
“the word is a weapon that both inflicts pain and secures power. Prisoners are
relentlessly rewritten within the official ‘power of writing’… Within this process the
prisoner’s sense of self and world is undermined, pain is made visible and
objectified in writing and converted into state power [but] prisoners write to restore
a sense of self and world, to reclaim the ‘truth’ from the apartheid lie, to seek
empowerment in an oppositional ‘power of writing’ against the official text of
imprisonment” (1993: 489).
The thesis will attempt to show that, notwithstanding their considerable
diversity, individual works within the corpus of South African prison
literature share many common characteristics. Despite this the study will
show also that, even though the prison writings have many common threads
running through them, there are many differences within individual writings
and the body of literature as a whole.
It could be argued that, in earlier years, the works that are the subject of
this study were quite satisfactorily regarded as part of other genres (for
example, autobiography). So is the whole process of reclassification
necessary? In other words, is there any point in attempting to argue for a
distinct category of writing (‘prison literature’)? One of the points that will
be made in detail later is that frequently the prison writings of a particular
writer are only a small aspect of his or her larger oeuvre, and these writings
have merely been included in more general discussions of the author’s body
of work as a whole. Clearly, this does not do justice to the distinct nature of
such a writer’s prison writings. It is the purpose of this study to give the
works that make up the corpus of South African prison literature their due.
The thesis begins with a brief summation of the prison system in South
Africa. This chapter puts the experiences that follow into context. Many of
the laws under which these writers were held no longer exist and so, in the
interest of better understanding, these are explained in the first chapter as
well.
This is followed by a brief survey of prison literature. Chapter Two
attempts to provide a concise and up-to-date list of the primary and
secondary sources that make up the category ‘prison literature.’
Chapter Three introduces the term ‘prison literature’. The chapter
includes many of the common characteristics found in prison writing, and
outlines the essential criteria of this body of writing. This is followed by a
brief examination of the various theories of literature that can be found in
prison literature.
Chapter Four introduces a vital aspect of the thesis and the argument
provided within it. An examination of the theories of Foucault takes place in
this chapter. He offers a thread that binds all prison literature together when
he states that the prison system is put in place to punish an offender.
Modern power to punish is based on the supervision and organization of
bodies in time and space. The thesis will then argue that it is in this very
space that prisoners write. Thus the hostile space of prison and prison life
provides the context in which the literature under examination can be
created.The second section of the thesis contains the close examinations of the
prison writings of various authors. This section begins with a fairly
comprehensive chapter on Cold Stone Jug (Chapter Five), and attempts to
describe the foundation that Bosman laid in the writing of this novel. The
chapters thereafter include comparisons between each individual prisonauthor’s
work and Bosman’s seminal novel, noting the similarities and
differences. Each of these chapters (Chapters Six to Nine) also provides a
justification for the selection of each of the authors discussed and attempts
to show why their writing must be considered some of the greatest prison
literature produced in South Africa.
Chapter Six examines the prison novel as exemplified in the writings of
Breyten Breytenbach and Hugh Lewin.
Chapter Seven introduces the concept of prison poetry. It is shown how
poets like Jeremy Cronin and Dennis Brutus have also followed the
example of Bosman, despite the generic difference in their work. This
chapter also attempts to show why poetry must be considered an important
part of this novel-dominated category of writing.
This argument continues in Chapter Eight, in which prison letters and
diaries are discussed and shown to be a vital part of prison literature. The
main focus of this chapter is the writings of Ahmed Kathrada.
Chapter Nine introduces the writing of women prisoners. This writing
shares the typical characteristics found in the works of the prisoners’ male
counterparts. No one novelist or poet is examined in detail. This section
rather examines women’s writing as a topic in terms of the study as a
whole. Importantly, however, it shows that prison writing is not gender- or
race-specific.
The thesis concludes by discussing the notion that these authors wrote
and lived in hostile spaces not only during their imprisonment, but also
afterwards: life after imprisonment becomes a hostile space too. The
conclusion argues that a clear development can be found in this writing –
vii
from the publication of Cold Stone Jug in 1949 up until the publication of
the final documents from Robben Island in the 1990s.

en

dc.language.iso

en

en

dc.subject

prisoners as authors

en

dc.subject

prisoners' diaries

en

dc.subject

prisoners' correspondence

en

dc.subject

prisons in literature

en

dc.subject

South African literature

en

dc.title

Writing in hostile spaces: a critical examination of South African prison literature.

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